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    Wayne Gray
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Ash and Ember - 1. From the Ashes

08 November 2018, Thursday 3:12 p.m.

Fumbling with an armload of groceries and the key to his new house, Grant finally managed to unlock the door. He had picked up the key only a couple of hours ago from the realtor, and he grinned excitedly despite the cold and his difficulty on the stoop.

Grant opened the door, eliciting a creak from the neglected hinges.

Nothing a little oil won't fix.

He stepped into the cold, dusty space. It was still well lit by the sun, which shone through the windows, even without the addition of an overhead light. He turned and shut the door with a gentle kick, then looked down the hall.

He stood at the end of a passageway leading deeper into the home. There were three doors; one that led off to a small room which Grant envisioned to become a den, one door to the garage, and one more to the downstairs bathroom. Ahead of him at the end of the hall, he could see into the living/dining/kitchen area.

He walked down the hall into the kitchen. Grant put his armful of groceries down on the counter and sighed, happy to be unburdened from the load. Then he looked around the room and smiled.

"What a fantastic deal this was. Wow." Grant's brown eyes sparkled with his excitement.

There was a relatively new gas range with an oven, a nice fridge, even a microwave and a dining table with three chairs. He found the odd count of chairs strange but decided that he shouldn't be choosy.

As is purchase. They come with the house.

The home was a repossession, and the bank was ready to cut its losses on the loan. Grant had purchased the place for a steal and only owed a small mortgage each month, which he planned to pay off as soon as possible.

He was new to Barre, Vermont. He was also new to his job, profession, and the East Coast. Grant had finished his residency for his Physician Assistant training only a few weeks ago and found employment quickly at the Barre Health Center. New graduates of his program were inundated with job offers from various employers, and Barre Health Center had the right mix of pay and size. He could earn more working for a hospital, but Grant was willing to give up a bit of money if it meant he could ensure he was home on weekends and holidays.

Plus, he wanted away from California, which also included his overprotective, controlling mother.

"Grant! Vermont? It's so far!"

He could still hear his mother's voice and see the frown of disapproval on his father's face as he stood behind her.

He was happy to be away. Finally done with school, training, and testing, Grant was ready to try life on the East Coast.

Even the cold didn't bother him. It was different, and that was what he needed. Though it was chilly inside. He walked over a few steps to the fireplace.

It was the only thing Grant genuinely didn't like about the house. Though it was a handsome and rustic feature, the only heat was an old stone fireplace. He sighed, knelt, and started the chore of building a fire. The realtor could tell Grant wasn't thrilled about it, so he had made every effort to make sure there were fire starting supplies lying neatly nearby, and a few sticks of wood. Grant knew there was plenty of wood in the garage - one wall was lined with a very dry stack of the stuff, so at least that wasn’t a worry.

He frowned as he peered into the fireplace. There was a burned log in it - blackened cinders on the outside, and old spiderwebs too. It looked like that log had been in there for months, at least.

He could spend time looking around, but he realized that he had no idea where his work gloves might be. Letting loose another sigh he reached in.

Grant lifted the log with a grimace. It was sooty, covered in ash and grime. He put it aside on the hearth, then rubbed his hands together to brush them free of the worst of it. Grabbing the newspaper left by the realtor, he wadded it up into a loose ball. Then he looked back at the fireplace.

"Huh." Mostly buried in ash and barely visible was something wrapped in burned leather inside the fireplace. It must have been under the log he had removed. Grant cocked his head and made a face. "What the hell?" He reached and his fingers closed on the spine of a small, thick book - one with a severely burned leather jacket.

Grant sat back on his haunches and flipped through the book.

A journal? There were dated entries in the book, handwritten in a neat, flowing script. Though the jacket was grimy and burned, the pages were largely intact. There couldn't have been many live cinders in the fire when it was tossed in, and the fire must have gone out shortly after.

He tried turning a page and realized how dirty his fingers were. Grant put the little, dense book down and continued his fire-building chore.

Once he had a small but sturdy blaze started, Grant took the book over to the sink with him. He washed his hands, then picked it up again with a paper towel. He then went to the garage.

The garage was one of Grant's favorite things about the house. Someone had gone through a lot of trouble to set it up to be a real workshop. Looking around the room made him want to learn woodworking. There was a table saw, a drill press, all sorts of other power tools, and many specialized tools used by professional builders. He had no real concept of the worth, but Grant knew tools were expensive. Why leave everything here? he wondered, not for the first time.

There was a box of various brushes, and in it was one with stiff bristles. He used the brush on the outside of the journal, and soon most of the grime and soot was off of it. Though it would always smell of fire, he could read it without making too much of a mess.

Grant re-entered the kitchen and sat at the table. He opened the journal to the first page.

 

12 August 2013, Monday 10:10 PM

Finally, we made it! John and I are here, in Barre, Vermont, in our very own house! It's so exciting. But more than the home, I'm just excited to be here with him.

I decided to start a journal about our new life together. Our life away from the judgment, and the fear, and the shame. It has been so long coming for us both. John has gone farther than any of his family with his education, but they can't see that. They only see what they consider to be his biggest failing. And they judge him for it. They judge us both. Honestly, I think they believe I "corrupted" him.

Well, fuck them! We're out of Georgia, and we're not going back. His sister was the only one even to ask where we were going. Out of all of them, she's the only one who ever treated me well. And I could tell it put a strain between her and the rest of the family for her to do that. I appreciate you, Beth! She's the only one of the bunch allowed to visit us.

We're away from all that now, so it doesn't matter anymore. We just put our bed together, and John is laying beside me, already asleep. He's still wearing all of his clothes, including his shoes. Poor guy's exhausted. Same here actually. We spent most of our day unloading the U-Haul and putting stuff away in what turned out to be a hot and humid day. For Vermont at least.

I'm going to go. I need to help my man out of his clothes so he can be comfortable. Then I'm going to sleep myself.

G'night, new journal.

~ T

 

Grant's dark and expressive eyes had a curious cast as he ran a hand through his hair. Huh. Previous owners? Sounds like a contentious relationship with the guy's family. Husband and wife, maybe? Through the required disclosures, he knew the house had changed hands twice. Once in 2013, and then just last month when he had made his offer to the bank.

"John and," his finger slid down the page, "T? So, Tina, or Tracy? Trisha maybe?" He bit his lip and started to go to the next entry when his belly growled at him. He hadn't eaten since breakfast, and there were still groceries out on the counter.

Standing, he went to the sink. He washed up again, as the journal was still a bit sooty, then set about preparing a simple meal.

Dinty Moore beef stew out of a can was the choice for tonight. He microwaved a bowl of the stuff and, while it warmed, went to the table and sat back down.

"Okay, 'T,' what happened next?" He was happy to have an interesting distraction. "I don't know how this thing ended up almost burned, but I'm glad it didn't." With a small smile, he began to read again.

 

14 August 2013, Wednesday 7:00 PM

John is a bit of a novelty here, and we knew that would be the case. We were shopping for our first big grocery run, and a little girl sitting in a shopping cart grabbed her mother's arm as we passed them. She pointed, her eyes wide, and her mouth open in surprise and wonder.

The woman glanced at us, then grimaced, embarrassed. "I'm so sorry." She went back to her daughter. "Becka, stop pointing at people! It's not nice!"

John only laughed. "It's okay. There are probably not many here that look like me." He smiled and said hello to the little girl in the cart. He took it a lot better than I would. He always does. I hate the race stuff, and how it keeps coming up. Yeah, this time it was better than most. And I know the little girl wasn't doing anything malicious, or wrong. She was just curious.

Still. It's probably good he's the black man and not me. He handles these situations with class, patience, and forgiveness.

He's a good man, my John.

I think I'm gonna go have my way with him now. 🙂

Till next time, journal.

~ T

 

Grant finished with the entry and closed the journal. Interracial couple. He nodded to himself. Yeah, this area is pretty damn white. Sounded like she was always looking out for him. That's really cool. He grinned. "And sounded like he got her motor running too!"

Grant left the journal on the table and got up to grab his bowl of food. He stood by the sink and ate quickly, without even really tasting the stuff. Grant ate to live. He didn't understand "favorite" foods that people had. Yes, some meals were more pleasant to eat. But it wasn't important enough for him to seek them out. To him, eating was just something he had to do in order to survive, so all of his meals were simple, easy, and fast. After washing his bowl and the spoon, he continued putting his things away.

The house was built in the 1960s and was a cute two-story affair. Two bedrooms and an added bathroom were upstairs while everything else was down. Though neither bedroom had its own bathroom, Grant didn't mind so much. There was one close at hand no matter the floor he was on, and that was enough.

He carried his boxes of clothes up the stairs. Putting them down on the floor in the hallway, he debated which bedroom to make his own. They were both almost the same size, and both had a decent-sized closet.

Grant settled on the bedroom with windows that faced the quiet street in front of his house. He put his boxes in the closet and went back down for more.

He carried his new queen-sized bed up, piece by piece. Frame, headboard, wooden slats, all were pretty easy. Then he got to the mattress. Pushing it up on edge, he had a look of determination on his face. "Okay. Let's do this."

The next few minutes were spent wrestling the heavy, not quite rigid mattress up the stairs. Finally at the top, he let it lean against the wall. Grant stood there and caught his breath. He laughed. "I need to get back to my yoga program. I'm already losing it!"

The last item was the box spring. Grant found that one a little easier. It wasn't as heavy, and it was stiff - both of which made it simpler to handle. He pulled it up one stair at a time until he parked it at the top along with the mattress.

The realtor had told him when he bought the place that some of the furniture was sold by the previous owner, including the old bed. Sort of a last-ditch effort to get anything out of the house that they could.

Grant felt a bit of sadness and guilt at his earlier joy of the repossession. That’s T and John. They had to sell their stuff. He frowned. Well, I hope they're doing okay now, wherever they are.

He pulled everything he would need for the assembly of his bed into the south-facing, street-side bedroom. Grant sat on the carpet and began putting the frame together. I wonder what happened? His mind kept going back to the journal. I should just read the end. Maybe it'll tell me why the journal was in the fireplace, and why John and T left. Grant shook his head slightly at himself. No. Just keep going from the start. You don't know what life will bring. Live T's life with her in the order she lived it.

He continued with his assembly. After a couple of mistakes, he finally got the frame together. Then the slats went down, which would hold the box spring and the mattress. Grant put those in place and stepped back to grin at his work.

"All right. The bed is done!"

Grant was inordinately pleased with himself. He was not a handy guy and struggled with things others would find simple - like putting a bed frame together. He always had trouble with spatial problems and puzzles, and he had an awful sense of direction. He called his lack of navigation skill his "curse." This meant his dreams of learning woodworking were just that - dreams.

But in other ways, he approached what some would consider brilliant. He knew people. He could put most at ease and socialize with just about anyone. His bedside manner was terrific, which made him a great healthcare provider. He made friends quickly, and he liked to be around people. Grant had a pure, natural charisma, and almost anyone who met him liked him.

Grant hummed tunelessly and threw flannel sheets over the mattress cover. Soon the bed was made. In addition to the flannel sheets, which Grant loved, there was a new blanket and then a very old family quilt on top of that. It was made with faded reds, golds, and brown - the colors of autumn. Though faded, the quilt was still in great shape and was a precious heirloom passed down from his grandmother. He ran his hand over it with a smile.

"Thanks, mamaw Martin."

His grandmother had taught him the basics of sewing so that he could repair the quilt if it were ever damaged. Luckily, Grant had never had to try his hand at fixing what amounted to a piece of art. He had even debated folding it up and putting it away someplace where it would always be safe, but his grandmother would not have approved of that. It was to be used - cherished, but used.

He would build his whole bedroom around its color scheme. As Grant gazed at the bed, he grinned. It made the room look amazing.

Grant was happy with his progress for the day. Breathing a contented sigh, he looked over his new bedroom.

"Yep. I'm feeling pretty good about how this is going."

 

08 November 2018, Thursday 8:48 p.m.

"I'm sorry, Troy. But you can't park here tonight." Donald Burgess stood beside Troy's van and wore an apologetic look. "My wife said she'd call the cops if you don't move the van."

Troy tried to keep the fatigue, irritation, and disappointment off of his face, though his green eyes betrayed some of it. He knew Mr. Burgess would let him park in front of his home if he could. Troy nodded. "Well, you've already let me be here a couple of nights." He looked the middle-aged man in the eye. "Tell Mrs. Burgess thanks, for the other two nights. I appreciate it."

Mr. Burgess seemed both relieved and sad. "I will." He patted the side of the van. "Thanks for your work. We definitely appreciate the quality of the job you've done for us so far."

Troy smiled, though the expression was a little forced. "Sure. I'm always going to do the best job I can." He sighed. "Okay, I'm off to find another place to overnight. I'll see you tomorrow. Have a good evening."

Troy got into the van and pulled away. He saw Mr. Burgess wave in his rear-view mirror.

He drove down the streets of Barre and thought about all of his regular spots. That late, he could probably get away with parking at the high school. Troy turned onto Crimson Tide Way, choosing a place far from the main buildings, under one of the lights in the parking lot. There was a high amount of mischief that happened near the school, but the visibility should help.

The light would also make it harder to sleep, but he didn't have a lot of choices. He parked. Troy put on his heavy jacket over the thick flannel shirt he already wore. He also pulled on a pair of sweatpants over his jeans and doubled up on his socks too. It would get freezing in the van.

Troy put up a windshield screen. It helped block out the harsh light that glared down from above on his vehicle. Putting his campervan bed down, Troy wearily climbed on. He had put in a thirteen-hour day, working on a remodeling project for the Burgesses.

Troy was a contractor and was paid by the project. So he tried to finish the work he was hired to do as fast as he could while still doing a good job. He had another couple of days to go on the Burgess remodel. The cold weather was not helpful, but Troy was one of the only independent contractors in the area willing to work outdoors through the season. He didn't have much of a choice; he needed the money.

Troy grabbed a knit cap that lay where he had left it on his pillow. Pulling it over top of his brown hair and his ears, he lay down.

Though he was tired, Troy's mind began to spin. As the van cooled, and as his breath became visible, he watched it plume from his lips in the muted light inside the vehicle. He blinked slowly and tried to avoid the place his mind always went when his world calmed, and he had nothing left to do but think.

Come on. Not tonight, Troy's mental voice begged. Not tonight. Just let me sleep.

He pulled up his threadbare blanket and an old sleeping bag with a busted zipper that he used as a second blanket.

Troy lay on his back, and despite his earlier plea, his mind conjured the most painful moment of his life for him to relive it.

Just as it did every night.

 

09 November 2018, Friday 6:00 a.m.

Troy woke to the alarm on his phone. He was stiff and felt far older and more worn out than his thirty-two-year-old body should. That was thanks to the months of sleeping in the van, his meager meals, and because of the lack of rest that he allowed for himself.

He lay there a moment, unwilling to give up the warmth trapped under the blanket and sleeping bag. The inside of the van was below freezing, and his nose burned from the low temperature.

Troy's bladder would not allow him to put off getting up much longer. He sighed and sat up. He stood, shivering in the cold. Troy set his jaw and freed his urine jug out of its spot, where it was strapped in place beside the sliding door so that it wouldn't fall over.

Troy was thankful the liquid in the jug was frozen - no smell that way. He opened it and relieved himself as quickly as he could. His penis didn't appreciate the low temperature inside the van, and Troy stuffed it back into his layers of clothing as soon as he had finished with a relieved grunt. He screwed on the lid and put the jug back in its spot.

Troy sat on the edge of his narrow little bed and put on his boots. He dreaded it, but he had to check. Troy opened the slider and stepped out of the van into the frosty morning. He walked completely around his vehicle and breathed a relieved sigh. Nobody had tagged him over the night. That was one thing about the winter - fewer people were willing to be out in the very low temperatures to cause trouble.

The old van was almost all that he had. Troy had sunk all of his money into it and the few tools he absolutely needed for his work. He used the hell out of the machine, so it required almost constant maintenance. He cared for the van as if his life depended on it - because it did. It was his home, workshop, and transportation.

He struggled to save money. Troy had a small bank account. It seemed that every time he got a little ahead, something he couldn't fix himself would break on the van, or he would lose a tool that needed replacing. Though his last financial trial was related to his teeth. Last month he had a cracked molar which required an expensive visit to the dentist. Troy had no sort of health or dental insurance. And so his account had been nearly emptied by that particular event.

Troy stoically accepted this, though he was not content for things to remain how they were. He strove hard, every day, to better himself and pull himself above his tough situation.

He re-entered the van and turned on the ignition. Troy was tired of being cold, and though it would burn fuel, he had to allow himself to have a moment of relative comfort before starting work.

Troy stepped into the back of the vehicle. Opening the tiny fridge that was built in under the little sink, he pulled out a jar of overnight oats. The inside of the fridge kept the oats from freezing since it was warmer in there than it currently was in the van. Troy opened the jar and set it on the counter next to the sink. Digging in a cabinet, he found his small bag of granola. Troy dumped what remained of it into his oats and looked forlornly into the empty container. He would have to replace the granola in a couple of days, after he got paid for the Burgess job.

Guess I'll have plain oatmeal until then.

Troy sat back on the bed and stared into space as he ate his food. He tried to avoid tasting the stuff. He didn't like oatmeal, but it was filling, had a lot of calories, and it was cheap. All were things he required of any food he bought.

Soon he was finished. Troy stood and washed the jar and his spoon quickly with a jug of water he stored in his fridge, so it remained unfrozen. He did this chore in his tiny sink. The water he used went into a holding tank, which he would have to empty later. His hands ached from the nearly frozen water, and after drying them, he shook and blew on them to get feeling back in his fingers.

Troy then brushed his teeth. The van had finally warmed a bit, and after he finished with his teeth, he peeled away his layers of clothes. He quickly washed his pits and crotch with a baby wipe. Troy made a hissing sound as he gingerly cleaned his rear. It hurt back there, likely from his lack of real hygiene. He did his best, then used one more for his face and hands.

Troy dressed again. He used a different flannel shirt and hung the one he had worn yesterday to air out. He tried to appear as if he had fresh clothes each day but was reasonably sure he wasn't fooling anybody who got close to him. Though he could no longer smell himself, he knew his clothes probably stank of sweat. Laundry was yet another expense, and he only went to the laundromat when he could no longer stand clothes stiff with dirt.

The only things he had going for him were his skills and his prices. He undercut all other local contractors. If he was able to perform a job with his limited tools, then there was no doubt that he would do a great one for relatively little expense.

Troy got into the driver's seat and took down the window covering. He looked through the windshield, up at the gray sky.

"Okay. No snow today. No snow. That's all I ask."

He put the van into gear and began the drive to the Burgesses. A few minutes later, he pulled up in front of the lovely craftsman-style home. Troy got out of his van and buckled on his tool belt.

Then he felt the first snowflake hit the back of his neck.

Troy dropped his head. Sighing wearily, he closed the slider on the van. Shouldering his bag, he walked across the quiet street to the house as the snow began to fall in earnest.

Here we go.
This one, this story ... it's special to me. It humanizes people who have fallen onto harder times. Shows them to just be ... people. Struggling and needing a hand doesn't make us less than, it just means we need help.
We are more than our circumstances. I hope this story reminds all of us of that.
Copyright © 2020 Wayne Gray; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Chapter Comments



Well, Wayne, I can understand why you’d notice that I hadn’t Commented on this particular story!

I can imagine much of what Troy is going through even though I never tried living in a vehicle. I can remember feeling like I’d never get warm again in the relatively balmy Bay Area winter. The rescue mission woke us up early in the morning and chased us out of the dorm. We had to wait outside in the cold at least 30-45 minutes while another group ate before they’d let us back in to eat breakfast.

When I stayed in the Berkeley Men’s Shelter, there was another program that used the building in the morning. That program offered free showers and laundry, so there were lots of people who slept on the streets or in vehicles who took advantage of the services. We figured out how to connect to the internet through an ethernet connection, so lots of us with computers would hang out. I had an ethernet switch and a couple cables, so I was able to splice my equipment into their line (the outlet was on one wall and they had a long cable to their office).

But the central Bay Area offers a lot more services than even the suburban cities further from the San Francisco/Oakland/Berkeley core.
 

Whenever you’re tempted to complain about the stench of an unwashed homeless person, ask yourself where they are supposed to shower or do laundry? If they can barely keep fed, how can they afford to pay a gym membership (for the showers) or a laundromat? How do you wash your clothes if you only have a single set of clothing? And why are homeless people less entitled to use public spaces than anyone else?

  • Love 1
11 hours ago, droughtquake said:

Well, Wayne, I can understand why you’d notice that I hadn’t Commented on this particular story!

I can imagine much of what Troy is going through even though I never tried living in a vehicle. I can remember feeling like I’d never get warm again in the relatively balmy Bay Area winter. The rescue mission woke us up early in the morning and chased us out of the dorm. We had to wait outside in the cold at least 30-45 minutes while another group ate before they’d let us back in to eat breakfast.

When I stayed in the Berkeley Men’s Shelter, there was another program that used the building in the morning. That program offered free showers and laundry, so there were lots of people who slept on the streets or in vehicles who took advantage of the services. We figured out how to connect to the internet through an ethernet connection, so lots of us with computers would hang out. I had an ethernet switch and a couple cables, so I was able to splice my equipment into their line (the outlet was on one wall and they had a long cable to their office).

But the central Bay Area offers a lot more services than even the suburban cities further from the San Francisco/Oakland/Berkeley core.
Whenever you’re tempted to complain about the stench of an unwashed homeless person, ask yourself where they are supposed to shower or do laundry? If they can barely keep fed, how can they afford to pay a gym membership (for the showers) or a laundromat? How do you wash your clothes if you only have a single set of clothing? And why are homeless people less entitled to use public spaces than anyone else?

Hi, droughtquake. 🙂

Thanks for the comments, and for the lived experience.

We serve houseless folks. We provide medical services, but we stock socks, underwear, granola bars ... we take donations of caps and gloves during the winter. We understand that not having a home leads to a staggering amount of psycho-social issues and trials others don't face.

Let me tell you ... our houseless folks are the most thankful, kindest of our patients. They don't feel entitled ... they're just happy to see us. We always do our best for them.

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2 hours ago, Wayne Gray said:

Hi, droughtquake. 🙂

Thanks for the comments, and for the lived experience.

We serve houseless folks. We provide medical services, but we stock socks, underwear, granola bars ... we take donations of caps and gloves during the winter. We understand that not having a home leads to a staggering amount of psycho-social issues and trials others don't face.

Let me tell you ... our houseless folks are the most thankful, kindest of our patients. They don't feel entitled ... they're just happy to see us. We always do our best for them.

I think there are a lot of people who are homeless (by government definition, at least) who aren’t aware of the resources available to them. I wonder if Troy could get assistance if he only knew where to go? In the SF Bay Area, and probably other regions, calling 2-1-1 (toll-free) connects you to operators who can refer you to all sorts of social services (not just those related to homelessness). Once you’ve connected to one agency, you usually find out about others agencies that offer associated services that you need.

But maybe it’s because of where I stayed when I was homeless, but I interacted with many rude, greedy, and entitled poor people.

I always made sure to thank everyone I encountered. No one was required to help me and I wanted to make sure that they knew I appreciated their assistance. But that seems to be partly related to my suburban upbringing as well…
;–)

Edited by droughtquake
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1 minute ago, kbois said:

I just finished reading both of the Camp Refuge stories and loved them. This story has already drawn me in. Looking forward to seeing how things are going to intersect for Grant and Troy. Great start!

Thank you for the great comment! I’m really glad you enjoyed Camp Refuge and Guarded.

This story is one of my best, I think. I hope you like it.

  • Love 5
1 hour ago, Fae Briona said:

Most people in the US are much closer to being in Troy's situation than they realize -- most people only have, at most, enough in savings to cover 3-month's of necessities before they would be on the streets.

Yup. That’s true. Even if we can’t relate to him now, the potential of being in his same shoes should make us feel something.

  • Love 3

Wow! Troy's situation is tragic and heartrending. I nearly ended up in a similar position though I had no work and no support until my kids came through with some help and I miraculously found an affordable room 3 days before I was due to hit the street life. So his struggles are real to me. I'm thankful that I was not facing the cold though as that makes his situation that much harder to bear. Very real characters. And how do they connect, though here is no doubt a part of the journal? By contrast Grant is enjoying setting up his first independent home. What a thrill for him and such a delight. I envy him that privilege and yearn myself to regain that independent living.

  • Love 4
1 hour ago, Jaro_423 said:

Wow! Troy's situation is tragic and heartrending. I nearly ended up in a similar position though I had no work and no support until my kids came through with some help and I miraculously found an affordable room 3 days before I was due to hit the street life. So his struggles are real to me. I'm thankful that I was not facing the cold though as that makes his situation that much harder to bear. Very real characters. And how do they connect, though here is no doubt a part of the journal? By contrast Grant is enjoying setting up his first independent home. What a thrill for him and such a delight. I envy him that privilege and yearn myself to regain that independent living.

Hi, Jaro_423! Thanks for the comment.

It's amazing how close we all ride to the line. Most people in the US are about three months away from what happened to Troy. Unfortunately it doesn't surprise me that your situation was similar to his.

As to how they connect ... well, keep reading. 🙂

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On 1/13/2020 at 7:59 PM, Wayne Gray said:

That's probably true, Butcher. It was posted on a couple of other sites before it made it here.

But ... this version is, much like Camp Refuge, a step up in quality of writing.

I hope you enjoy it the second time through.

Besides the great beginning to this story, your comment got me very excited.  I loved Camp Refuge!  

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